Movie appeal

Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe

Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe Blu-ray delivers great video and superb audio in this exceptional Blu-ray release

The concert film of Led Zeppelin's legendary 2007 reunion at the Ahmet Ertegun Tribute Concert at London's O2 Arena.

For more about Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe and the Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe Blu-ray release, see Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe Blu-ray Review published by Jeffrey Kauffman on November 17, 2012 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.5 out of 5.

Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day Deluxe Blu-ray Review

House of the H(O2)ly.

For many, many years in my guise as a club and cruise line pianist, I had a little framed cartoon up on my piano that
featured a lounge pianist with a little sign on his piano that said: Requests: $5.00, "Feelings":
$500.00. (If you're not familiar with the lachrymose Morris Albert tune, sorry for depriving you of a great punchline.)
Some of the strangest requests I've received over the years, though, have had nothing to do with these more "casual"
gigs, but instead have been courtesy of extremely formal occasions, notably weddings. I played the wedding of one
guy who owned a local movie theater and who was a huge James Bond fan, and he and his bride wanted all of the
seating music to be themes from Bond films. I can't recall what the bride's processional was (maybe "Nobody Does it
Better"), but the groom entered—replete in white tux jacket and twirling and crouching as if he were dodging bullets—
to Monty Norman's legendary 007 Theme.

Another kind of funny request came from parents of a bride in
another wedding I played. These parents were obviously ex-hippies (I think even they would describe
themselves that way), and they were huge Led Zeppelin fans. They had arranged for their daughter to be
married outside in Portland's gorgeous Washington Park, right in the Park's famous Rose Gardens. And they wanted
more than anything for their "little girl" to walk up the grassy aisle to the strains of "Stairway to Heaven". So I found
myself on a beautiful summer day in the middle of a bunch of rose bushes pounding out the immortal Robert Plant –
Jimmy Page tune and wondering if I'd ever be playing "Good Times Bad Times" or "Communication Breakdown" if the
marriage faltered and ended in divorce.

"Stairway to Heaven" is perhaps ironically the one song that non-Zeppelin fans
think of most often when asked about the band, even though it was never released as an official single, probably due
to its extended length in its original version. And rather surprisingly (and perhaps even appallingly), Zeppelin, for all
their innovation and overall success, had an astounding paucity of charting singles in the United States, until relatively
recently. A lot of Zeppelin's popularity during their initial heyday was due to the band's relentless touring, but once
original drummer John Bonham died unexpectedly in 1980, the group disbanded and many probably thought live
performances were a thing of the past for an assemblage that regularly was able to fill stadiums and arenas in the tens
of thousands. But occasional reunion performances have reignited the Zeppelin flame over the ensuing years, and this
2007 concert, part of a tribute to legendary Atlantic Records producer Ahmet Ertegun, was host to another screaming
horde of Zeppelin fanatics who poured into London's immense O2 arena to hear Robert Plant, John Paul Jones, Jimmy
Plant and John Bonham's son Jason roar through a visceral set of Zeppelin songs.

The name Ahmet Ertegun may not ring a bell for those who don't regularly read album credits, but this entrepreneur founded and was
President of Atlantic Records, fostering an absolutely incredible variety of acts throughout his multi-decade tenure. Along with Led Zeppelin,
Ertegun had a major role in promoting such legendary artists as Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, Eric Clapton, Yes and countless other rock
acts. His jazz credentials are no less amazing, with a huge roster of artists who either began their careers on Atlantic or matriculated there
somewhere along the way. Ertegun sadly tripped and fell at a Rolling Stones (another band he helped) concert in 2006, striking his head on
a concrete floor and falling into a coma and dying several weeks afterward. His initial turn for the worse after a brief post-accident period
where it seemed he might recover was actually announced by Jimmy Page at Led Zeppelin's induction into the United Kingdom Music Hall of
Fame. Several memorial and/or benefit concerts sprang up in the wake of Ertegun's demise, but this huge event in December 2007 was by
far the largest and the most anticipated, as it offered the first full length "reunion" concert by Led Zeppelin, albeit with Jason Bonham taking
the place of his late father.

Demand for tickets for this event was so high it's become part of the Guinness Book of World Records, with over 20 million requests pouring
in online. In fact as one of the supplements on the bonus DVD in this deluxe set makes clear, a lottery had to be established to handle the
overwhelming number of people wanting to get into the concert. Despite Led Zeppelin obviously knowing that this concert was going to be
high profile and having actually made appropriate preparations to capture it all on video, the release of Celebration Day was never
officially announced after the concert, and in fact Page was on record saying that mixing the thing would be a logistical nightmare. Now
almost five years after the concert, Zeppelin fans are rejoicing, and rightfully so, to see this incredible concert in high definition and with
lossless audio.

Time has been incredibly kind to the surviving members of the band, at least for the most part. Are there niggling concerns? Probably,
mostly with regard to Robert Plant's voice, which seems just a trifle thin and less forceful than usual on occasion. But even that is a passing
anomaly in what is an overall sterling evening of incredible music. Jimmy Page's guitar playing is absolutely phenomenal throughout this
rather long (over two hours) set. He offers several blistering electric solos, but even his more laid back efforts, as on a luscious "Stairway to
Heaven", reveal some absolutely gorgeous filigrees that completely recolor the song in a new light. Bonham fils provides some
incredibly aggressive drum playing which really elevates the higher octane material immeasurably.

Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Warner Music with an AVC encoded 1080i transfer in 1.78:1. Director
David Carruthers covers the action with an incredible panoply of cameras from a variety of angles, and he has further offered up visual delights
by processing some of the footage with added grain and various other effects. The concert does have a certain ADHD quality, with a lot of quick
cutting, but it's not as bad as many other contemporary concert outings have been in that regard. The image here is very nicely crisp and well
detailed, at least in the close-ups. There are some passing issues with shadow detail and crush (especially with Plant, who is wearing black), as
well as some very minor quasi-moiré that crops up when the lighting and projection array behind the band is all one color and the camera pans
or zooms. Otherwise, though, this is a very sharp and clear presentation that should easily delight Zeppelin fans.

Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day features both a lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround mix as well as an uncompressed LPCM 2.0
stereo fold down. Both of these tracks offer really vigorous sonic clarity, although the 5.1 track makes Plant's occasional thinness more
apparent, as he tends to get just ever so slightly buried in the ambient hall noise and onslaught from the band. The midrange and low range of
the 5.1 track is its most outstanding feature, offering supreme clarity without losing any of the aggressive force of Bonham's drums or Jones'
bass. There's probably going to be too much audience noise for some listeners, but perhaps that was one of the mixing challenges that Plant
alluded to when he mentioned several years ago that release of Celebration Day wasn't imminent. Dynamic range isn't huge here, since
the band tends to favor more high octane material, but when things do quiet down, as in the opening sections of "Stairway to Heaven", there's
still a very appealing clarity and precision to the audio.

Shepperton Rehearsal 06.12.07 (SD; 1:56:46). This incredible rehearsal footage takes the band more or
less
through its entire set list, from the opening film on. The only drawback here is this is a single camera set up, shot from
the
back of the studio, so the band is more or less just blobs of color in front of the huge projection screen. On the plus side,
this has uncompressed LPCM 2.0 audio, perhaps the first time I've ever seen that option on a DVD.

Zeppelin Media Moment (3:39) is a compilation of British news reports about the O2 Concert.

Tampa Opening Film (1:42) is the opening feature that starts out the concert. The weird thing here is that
this
is anamorphically squeezed, though it was obviously originally in 1.33:1. Someone along the line must have cropped the
original for exhibition in 1.78:1, and then not encoded this for anamorphic presentation (it's possible to get it to look
"normal", albeit cropped, but using your television's aspect ratio tool).

Has it been worth the wait? Most definitely. This amazing performance has been captured with a wealth of high definition imagery from a
variety of angles, and with overall superb sounding lossless audio. Celebration Day is being released in several different editions, so you
probably want to check through all of the options before deciding which one to get, but if you're a Zeppelin fan, there's no question you
are going to want this. This particular edition offers the entire concert on two CDs as well as a really fantastic bonus DVD with great (if
hard to see) rehearsal footage. Highly recommended.

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